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“Role Theory,” Political Science, and African Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2011

Alvin Magid
Affiliation:
State University of New York, Albany
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Abstract

Numerous studies of role, employing diverse methodologies in a wide range of social contexts, have accumulated in the social sciences over many decades. The concept of role retains considerable appeal for some who still pursue the goal of a unified theory of behavior for the social sciences, and for many others who discern in the role perspective a major source of concepts and insights on which they may draw eclectically for all manner of social research. Since the 1950s, and especially during the current decade, political scientists have produced studies of role and of role conflict focusing on political and administrative actors caught up in the process of change in various independent African states. Because die number and diversity of these studies are likely to increase in the future, they merit description and evaluation as a group. Both objectives are pursued in this article, with particular reference to three works on politics and administration in Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Tanzania.

Type
Review Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1980

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References

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9 Role conflict involves contradictory expectations that cannot be fulfilled simultaneously by the same actor. The concept is explicated on pp. 320–21.

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24 See, for example, Ibid., 116–18, 183–89; Barrows, Grassroots Politics in an African State, 97–142.

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28 The four alternatives are contradictory role expectations involving one role-set; contradictory role expectations involving multiple role-sets; contrary role expectations involving one role-set; contrary role expectations involving multiple role-sets.

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30 Magid (fn. 10), 12–19.

31 Ibid., 122–24, I93–99J 222–28.

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34 Ibid.; see also Nadel (fn. 29), 45–62.

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